Bad Idea (magazine)
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Bad Idea (magazine)
''Bad Idea'' is a British general interest magazine based in London, England. Overview ''Bad Idea'' was founded in September 2006 by journalists Jack Roberts and Daniel Stacey, both of whom were students at a magazine production class run by Clay Felker, the founder of New York Magazine, at the University of California. ''Bad Idea'' is known for its feature stories, which are often written in the first person. These have included insider accounts of life as a ‘honeytrapper’ – a private detective sent to ensnare potentially unfaithful husbands; an exposé of Dubai’s sex trade; an investigation into the growth of ‘Web 2.0’ sex dating sites; and a feature following Iraq's Kurds, as they search for DNA evidence of Saddam Hussein's ‘Anfal’ genocide. In May 2008, Portico Books released Bad Idea – The Anthology, a paperback collection of writing from the magazine's first two years. The magazine was described in a small review of the book published in the Observer ...
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Magazine
A magazine is a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content. They are generally financed by advertising, purchase price, prepaid subscriptions, or by a combination of the three. Definition In the technical sense a ''journal'' has continuous pagination throughout a volume. Thus '' Business Week'', which starts each issue anew with page one, is a magazine, but the '' Journal of Business Communication'', which continues the same sequence of pagination throughout the coterminous year, is a journal. Some professional or trade publications are also peer-reviewed, for example the '' Journal of Accountancy''. Non-peer-reviewed academic or professional publications are generally ''professional magazines''. That a publication calls itself a ''journal'' does not make it a journal in the technical sense; ''The Wall Street Journal'' is actually a newspaper. Etymology The word "magazine" derives from Arabic , ...
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Lowell Bergman
Lowell Bergman (born July 24, 1945) is an American journalist, television producer and professor of journalism. In a career spanning nearly five decades Bergman worked as a producer, a reporter, and then the director of investigative reporting at ABC News and as a producer for CBS's ''60 Minutes'', leaving in 1998 as the senior producer of investigations for CBS News. He also was the founder of the investigative reporting program at the Graduate School of Journalism at UC Berkeley and for 28 years taught there as professor. He was also a producer/correspondent for the PBS documentary series ''Frontline''. In 2019, Bergman retired. The story of his investigation into the tobacco industry was chronicled in Michael Mann’s '' The Insider'', which was nominated for seven Academy Awards. Bergman was portrayed by Al Pacino. From 1999 to 2008, Bergman was an investigative correspondent for ''The New York Times''. He forged a partnership between The Times and PBS Frontline in 1999 creat ...
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Lifestyle Magazines Published In The United Kingdom
Lifestyle often refers to: * Lifestyle (sociology), the way a person lives * ''Otium'', ancient Roman concept of a lifestyle * Style of life (german: Lebensstil, link=no), dealing with the dynamics of personality Lifestyle may also refer to: Business and economy * Lifestyle business, a business that is set up and run with the aim of sustaining a particular level of income * Lifestyle center, a commercial development that combines the traditional retail functions of a shopping mall with leisure amenities * Lifestyle (department store), an Emirati retail fashion brand Film and television Channels * ''Lifestyle'' (Australian TV channel), an Australian subscription television station * ''Lifestyle'' (British TV channel), a defunct British television station * ''Lifestyle'' (Philippine TV channel), a Philippine lifestyle and entertainment cable channel owned by ABS-CBN Series and documentaries * ''Lifestyle'' (GR series), a weekly entertainment news show that is broadcast on Alte ...
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Sorious Samura
Sorious Samura (born 27 October 1963) is a Sierra Leonean journalist. He is best known for two CNN documentary films: '' Cry Freetown'' (2000) and ''Exodus from Africa'' (2001). The self-funded ''Cry Freetown'' depicts the most brutal period of the civil war in Sierra Leone with Revolutionary United Front, RUF rebels capturing the capital city (January 1999). The film won, among other awards, an Emmy Award and a Peabody. ''Exodus from Africa'' shows the harrowing effort by the best of young African male blood to break through to Europe via death- and danger-ridden paths from Sierra Leone and Nigeria, via Mali, the Sahara desert, Algeria, and Morocco through the Strait of Gibraltar to Spain. In his recent two projects ''Living with Hunger'' and ''Living with Refugees'' (nominated for an Emmy award), he takes reality television to its extreme, becoming the central character in the films by living the lifestyle of an Ethiopian villager and Sudanese refugee respectively; in doin ...
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Nicholas Royle
Nicholas Royle (born 20 March 1963 in Manchester) is an English novelist, editor, publisher, literary reviewer and creative writing lecturer. Literary career Author Royle has written seven novels: ''Counterparts'', ''Saxophone Dreams'', ''The Matter of the Heart'', ''The Director’s Cut'', ''Antwerp'', ''Regicide'' and ''First Novel''. He also claims to have written more than 100 short stories, which have appeared in a variety of anthologies and magazines, including '' Bad Idea'', with his short story ''Confessions of a Serial Coat Snatcher'' appearing in the 2008 ''Bad Idea Anthology''. He has written two short-story collections: ''Mortality'' and ''Ornithology''. Awards Royle has won a British Fantasy Award three times: Best Anthology in 1992 and 1993 and Best Short Story in 1993. He has been nominated for Best Short Story three further times. ''The Matter of the Heart'' won the Bad Sex in Fiction Award in 1997. Editor As an editor, Royle is best known for having edited '' T ...
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Patrick Neate
Patrick Neate (born 1970) is a British novelist, journalist, poet, screenwriter and podcaster. Early life Born and raised as a Roman Catholic in South London, he was educated at St. Paul's School and Cambridge University. He spent a gap year in Zimbabwe and has since returned to Africa on many occasions. He drew on the gap year experience in ''Musungu Jim and the Great Chief Tuloko''. Career Novels His books to date, in order of publication, include ''Musungu Jim'', ''Twelve Bar Blues'', ''London Pigeon Wars'', ''Where You're At'', ''City of Tiny Lights'', ''Culture is Our Weapon'', and ''Jerusalem''. ''Musungu Jim'', ''Twelve Bar Blues'' and ''Jerusalem'' are a trilogy in that the characters of Jim and Musa Musa are found in all three novels. However, each stands alone. In each, he takes a foreign culture and explores the nature of story and the power of stories to create identities. At its best, his writing is lyrical about the nature of humanity, and yet still sufficiently ...
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Xiaolu Guo
Xiaolu Guo FRSL () born 20 November 1973) is a Chinese-born British novelist, memoirist and film-maker, who explores migration, alienation, memory, personal journeys, feminism, translation and transnational identities. Guo has directed a dozen films including documentaries and fictions. Her most well-known films include She, a Chinese and We Went to Wonderland. Her novels have been translated into 28 languages. '' Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China'' won the National Book Critics Circle Award 2017. In 2013, she was named as one of ''Granta'' magazine's Best of Young British Novelists, a list drawn up once a decade. She is one of the inaugural fellows of the Columbia Institute of Ideas and Imagination in Paris, 2018, and a jury member for the Man Booker Prize 2019. She is currently a visiting professor and Writer-in-Residence at Columbia University in New York City. Early life Xiaolu Guo grew up with her illiterate grandparents in a village of fishermen, then wit ...
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Robert Greene (American Author)
Robert Greene may refer to: Entertainment *Robert Greene (dramatist) (1558–1592), English writer *Bob Greene (fitness) (born 1958), American writer on fitness *Robert Greene (American author) (born 1959), American author of books on strategy * Robert Joseph Greene (born 1973), Canadian author of gay romance fiction *Robert Greene (filmmaker) (born 1976), American documentary filmmaker * Bob Greene (musician) (1922–2013), American jazz pianist Journalism * Robert W. Greene (1929–2008), American journalist *Bob Greene (born 1947), American journalist and author *Robert Lane Greene, American journalist Other *Robert Greene (philosopher) (1678–1730), English philosopher *Bob Greene (Makah) (1918–2010), American Makah elder *Robert Everist Greene (born 1943), American mathematician * Robert L. Greene, American psychologist *Bob Greene (politician), New Hampshire politician See also *Bert Greene (other) *Bob Green (other) * Greene (surname) *Robert Green (d ...
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Niven Govinden
Niven Govinden (born 1973) is an English novelist. He was born in East Sussex and then educated at Goldsmiths College Goldsmiths, University of London, officially the Goldsmiths' College, is a constituent research university of the University of London in England. It was originally founded in 1891 as The Goldsmiths' Technical and Recreative Institute by the Wor ..., University of London, where he studied film. To date he has written five novels and a number of short stories. His writing has appeared in the magazine '' Bad Idea'', and his short story ''My Cinephiliac Shame'' appeared in the 2008 ''Bad Idea Anthology''. He was appointed the Chair of Judges for the 2015 Green Carnation Prize. Novels ''We Are The New Romantics'' (2004) ''Graffiti My Soul'' (2007) ''Black Bread White Beer'' (2013) ''All the Days and Nights'' (2014) ''This Brutal House'' (2019) ''Diary of a Film'' (2021) References External linksGovinden Canongate page
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Ron Butlin
Ron Butlin (born 1949 in Edinburgh) is a Scottish poet and novelist who was Edinburgh Makar (Poet Laureate) from 2008 to 2014. Education Butlin was educated at the University of Edinburgh. He later became writer in residence in 1982 and 1984 at the university. Bibliography He has written several novels, collections of short stories, poems and plays. His work has been widely anthologised in Britain and abroad, and translated into over a dozen languages. His debut novel, ''The Sound Of My Voice'', was republished in 2002 with an introduction by Irvine Welsh who called it “one of the greatest pieces of fiction to come out of Britain in the Eighties”. Butlin is married to the Scottish-Swiss novelist and short story writer Regi Claire. Opera Libretto He has written seven libretti for opera, mostly for Scottish Opera, and frequently in collaboration with composer Lyell Cresswell. Bibliography Novels * ''The Sound of My Voice'' (1987) * ''Night Visits'' (1997) * ''Belonging'' ...
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Jonas Bendiksen
Jonas Bendiksen (born 1977) is a Norwegian photojournalist based near Oslo. He has published the books ''Satellites'' (2006) and ''The Places We Live'' (2008) and received awards from World Press Photo, International Center of Photography, National Magazine Awards and Pictures of the Year International. Bendiksen is a member of Magnum Photos and has served as its president. Life and work Bendiksen was born in Tønsberg, in Vestfold county, southern Norway in 1977. He lived in Russia for several years. The time he spent there resulted in his book, ''Satellites - Photographs from the Fringes of the former Soviet Union'', about separatist republics in the former USSR, published in 2006. For three years he photographed slum communities in Nairobi in Kenya, Mumbai in India, Jakarta in Indonesia, and Caracas in Venezuela, for ''The Places We Live'', a book published in 2008, and an exhibition containing projections and voice recordings. Bendiksen became a Magnum Photos nominee in 2 ...
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Clay Felker
Clay Schuette Felker (October 2, 1925 – July 1, 2008) was an American magazine editor and journalist who co-founded ''New York'' magazine in 1968. He was known for bringing numerous journalists into the profession. ''The New York Times'' wrote in 1995, "Few journalists have left a more enduring imprint on late 20th-century journalism—an imprint that was unabashedly mimicked even as it was being mocked—than Clay Felker." Birth and education He was born in 1925 in Webster Groves, Missouri, son of Carl Felker, an editor of ''The Sporting News'', and his wife, the former Cora Tyree, the former women's editor of the ''St. Louis Post-Dispatch''. Both of Clay's parents, along with a grandfather and a grandmother, graduated from the University of Missouri School of Journalism. He had one sibling, Charlotte. Felker's grandfather, Henry Clay Felker, of German aristocratic origins, fled Germany after the 1848 Conservative takeover. The family surname was originally von Fredrikstein. F ...
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